1848 (documentary)
Movie | |
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German title | 1848 |
Original title | La Révolution de 1848 |
Country of production | France |
original language | French |
Publishing year | 1950 |
length | 20 minutes |
Rod | |
Director |
Marguerite de la Mure Victoria Mercanton |
production | Coopérative Générale du Cinéma Français |
music | Guy Bernard |
camera | André Dumaître |
cut | Pierre Courtade |
occupation | |
|
1848 (Original title: La Révolution de 1848 ) is a French documentary - short film , which was built by Marguerite de la Mure and Victoria Mercanton in 1949 and at the Oscar ceremony in 1950 was nominated for an Oscar.
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In the manner of an iconography, the film shows drawings, prints, engravings and caricatures, paintings and documents by artists such as Honoré Daumier , Eugène Delacroix or Paul Gavarni who recorded the history of the revolution of 1848 , with which the rule of the liberal "bourgeois king" Louis-Philippe of Orléans was ended, which in the further course of the revolution led to the nephew of the former emperor Napoleon Bonaparte , Louis Napoléon Bonaparte , becoming the new president.
Production, publication
The film was produced by the Coopérative Générale du Cinéma Français / French Cinema General Cooperative.
In the United Kingdom, the film was released on March 23, 1950 under the title Eighteen Forty-Eight for the first time. In Belgium he was presented in July 1950 in Knokke at the Quinzaine du Cinéma Français.
Award
The Coopérative Générale du Cinéma Français was nominated for an Oscar for the film in the category Best Documentary Short at the 1950 Academy Awards, but was subject to the short documentaries A Chance to Live by Richard De Rochemont and So Much for So Little by Edward Selzer .
Web links
- 1848 in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- La Révolution de 1848 Video at ina.fr. in the original
- 1848 projects received at oscars.org (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ 1848 (1950) at letterboxd.com (English)
- ↑ The 22nd Academy Awards | 1950 at oscars.org (English)